Friday, May 25, 2007

I blog, therefore I am £70,000 richer

T’S the blog that captures the mood of the moment for thousands of middle-class families — and could make its author’s fortune.

Less than six weeks after starting to write about downshifting from London to rural Northumberland, a mother of three young children has landed a £70,000 publishing deal.

Early last month Judith O’Reilly launched Wife in the North, an online chronicle of her battles with three children, two elderly parents and an absentee husband while living in a northern hamlet, with the nearest town half an hour’s drive away.

Last week, after whirlwind approaches from an agent and a publisher, she signed a deal to turn the blog, which has become a surprise hit in Britain and America, into a book to be published by Viking Penguin.

Her publisher believes the theme of a former career woman following a dream to bring up a young family in rural surroundings will tap into the zeitgeist of the postBridget Jones generation.

O’Reilly’s wry, poignant descriptions of her life have met sudden success because of stylish writing and the power of having the right connections in cyberspace. Like the pop singer Lily Allen, who came to prominence through her site on MySpace, O’Reilly found an audience on the internet before breaking into the traditional media.

“It’s amazing, it’s all happened so fast,” said O’Reilly, who had not had any

paid work for months after moving north from London. In mid-January her blog was mentioned on the website of Tom Watson, the MP and regular blogger, whom she had asked for advice. The next day Iain Dale, the political commentator and another prolific blogger, linked Wife in the North on his site.

That in turn led Andrew Sullivan, the American writer and Sunday Times columnist, to note its quality. US readers soon logged on in droves. Within days Patrick Walsh, a British literary agent and publisher, had seen the potential and began working on a deal.

“I’ve done other blogs,” said Walsh, “but what’s so refreshing is that it isn’t about sex or celebrity; it’s wry, humorous and honest.”

O’Reilly, 42, left her previous job as education correspondent of The Sunday Times and moved to Northumberland because her husband Alastair loved the area and wanted to bring up their family away from east London.

In the event, his work commitments have kept him toiling in the capital and he can be away for weeks at a time. Meanwhile, she has found herself struggling to cope with three children in unfamiliar surroundings without her friends and networks.

She began blogging in earnest in January as she and Alastair prepared to renovate the two old cottages they had bought.

An entry on her site, www. wifeinthenorth.com, for January 9 reads: “Here I am in wind-swept, muddy Northland whenI have Beatrix Potter townmouse written all over me. I know the marriage vows say something about ‘in sickness and in health’ — I am sure, however, they didn’t mention ‘up in the north and down in the south’ becauseI wouldn’t have signed up for that.”

With 175,000 new ones created every day,

I blog, therefore I am

With 175,000 new ones created every day, blogs about to join the mainstream

Published October 24, 2006

On the one hand, blogs are sweeping the nation, growing exponentially, wielding an influence and power rarely held by such a blurt of a word. At this rate, it's not unreasonable to assume that soon we'll have a blog in the White House.

On the other hand, only 8 percent of U.S. Internet users have one, and a whole bunch more aren't entirely sure what the term means. You may be the member of your social set who is opinionated, tech-savvy or trend-victim enough to maintain a blog, but there's pretty much no way your folks have one, unless you set it up for them.

Yet it's almost to the point where it isn't absurd to call blogs "mainstream."

Even now, the term is starting to appear in newspapers without the once-standard explainer that it derives from "Web log," as "sitcom" long ago shed its "situation comedy" antecedent. That's mainstream.

The giant social networking site MySpace has introduced the concept of blogging to tens of millions, some of whom understand that it is different from accumulating "friends." Anything that happens on MySpace these days is mainstream.

SixApart, the San Francisco company behind the popular LiveJournal, Movable Type and TypePad blogging tools, is about to introduce a new online product that's aimed squarely at the mainstream: family-and-friends bloggers, people who want to share baby photos, funny videos or an anecdote or recipe, but with each other rather than the entire Internet.

This ad-supported service, Vox (vox.com), debuts widely next week. In its beta version it has been a gem for my far-flung family, allowing us to post and comment on photos of the new nephew or show video of a grandson hitting a home run in T-ball (check out the grin as he rounds third base).

With superb privacy controls, it works like a casual group meeting point, a sort of virtual kiosk, not as demanding as an e-mail, but always there when the mood to catch up with the family (or book group, or set of college chums) strikes.

It, and the inevitable competitors, has the potential to spread low-key, higher-toned, adult blogging -- as opposed to the more frantic, on-the-make variety exhibited on MySpace -- well into society's nooks and crannies.

"As seminal as instant messaging was and e-mail was, we believed very strongly that blogging was going to take its place as the third big communication tool," says Andrew Anker, Vox product manager for Six Apart, a company founded by early blogging star Mena Trott. "MySpace proves we were right."

The blogging impulse, "to connect with people you care about and share the information you care about," is almost universal, Anker says. And there's still plenty of room for newcomers to get on board, considering that the Pew Internet & American Life Project found this past summer that 12 million American adults (8 percent of Internet users) keep blogs and 57 million (39 percent) read them.



Numbers keep going up

"It's an interesting time in this industry, where a lot of people are doing it and everybody's numbers keep going up," Anker says.

And it's veering into the every day.

"If it's not mainstream, blogging is pretty darn close," says David Sifry, founder of Technorati (technorati.com), a burgeoning site built on the idea of tracking and sorting through blogs. "We're seeing about 175,000 new Weblogs created every single day, about two every second of every day."

Lest you think blogging may have cooled off after political and press-watchdog blogs brought the term into popular discussion, the rate of blog creation tracked by Technorati has doubled in half a year. Seven months ago, Sifry says, there was "only" -- the term is ironic -- one blog being created every second.

To be sure, not all of the 57 million blogs Technorati watches (one-third of them English-language) are active. But about 55 percent are, with active defined as one new post in the last three months. And about one in eight of the bloggers post at least weekly.

The term for the aggregate of this, you've probably seen, is "blogosphere," but, really, there's nothing spherical or single-minded about it. It's more like a million long arms all connected at the body of the Internet. "Blogosquid" might be better.

It's probably worth pausing here to define a blog, because while you may know it when you see it, its distinguishing characteristics are elusive. It's not really all that different from the old Internet idea of a "personal home page," or the even older idea of a journal that's in some way intended for public consumption.



What is a blog?

Blogs, simply, are Web sites regularly updated with new material, most often, but not always, text entries. They are usually organized by date, with the newest stuff on top, and the formatting, thanks to the various blogging tools that have simplified this form of self-publishing, is pretty much standard. Those tools, in addition to the Six Apart family, include WordPress and Google's Blogger.

Because of the early publicity, a misconception has arisen that blogging is as dominated by political chatter as a state-capitol watering hole.

Not true. Personal bloggers abound, Heather Armstrong, who supports her family by writing intimately and vividly about them at Dooce.com, being perhaps the best-known example.

The Pew Internet project (www.pewinternet.org) found that "the American blogosphere is dominated by those who use their blogs as personal journals." The primary topic was "my life and experiences" for 37 percent of poll respondents; politics took a distant second place, at 11 percent.

"Some of this is, yeah, people who are writing about the election coming up or items of national importance," Sifry says. "Some of them are people posting pictures of their kittens. There's also a really interesting group in the middle writing about their neighborhood or their school district. We call this group the Magic Middle."

And it's that middle, blog-watchers think, who can make blogging commonplace.

----------

Hypertext, the Tribune blog of Steve Johnson (sajohnson@tribune.com), is at chicagotribune.com/johnson.

If you write a blog or read a blog

If you write a blog or read a blog, get our funny blog products and tell the world. T-shirts, posters, tote bags, coffee mugs and more.

I blog, Therefore I Am

I blog, Therefore I Am
I blog, therefore I am.

Je blog (handwritten)

Je blog (handwritten)
Je blog, donc je suis. I blog, therefore I am (in French).

Blogito, Ergo Sum - one line

Blogito, Ergo Sum - one line
Blogito, ergo sum. I blog, therefore I am.

I See Blog People

I See Blog People
Blog people are everywhere.

Je blog, donc je suis

Je blog, donc je suis
I blog, therefore I am.

I'm not Gay




Where's My Stuff?
  • Track your recent orders.
  • View or change your order.
  • Shipping & Returns
  • See our shipping rates.
  • Make a
  • I blog, therefore I am

    I blog, therefore I am

    By Nicole Manktelow
    November 8 2002
    Icon


    Articles are published and news reports are broadcast around the clock, but the words of the press are quickly outnumbered online.

    Weblogs or "blogs" are a rising force, filling PC screens with a deluge of commentary direct from diary-writing readers and viewers.

    In many cases their entries are fed by the daily news, but could blogs become more than a companion to the media?

    Amid postings of shock, grief and dismay at the bombings in Bali, some blogs have included first-hand reports. Alex Robson's site, for example, contains an eyewitness account of the blasts.

    Meanwhile, bloggers in the United States recently lent a hand in the search for the Washington sniper. Wired reported that bloggers called for information from the public, hoping to discover vital clues, before the authorities had detained any suspects.

    Cynics might argue there's a fine line between blogging and the bandwagon but, says Sydney-based software developer and blogger Anthony J. Hicks, "that's the beauty of Web logging - people can write about whatever".

    Hicks runs a directory of Australian bloggers. About 290 are listed on his site.

    "When blogging first kicked off, there were people who really had lots to say. They are still there but now more people are into it, so there's more noise," Hicks says.

    "September 11 created this whole new community of war bloggers - blogs specifically about the war [on terrorism]."

    Hosting site Blogspot promotes its service as "your brain on the Web". It and other tools make blogging so easy, entries can be updated on a whim. And some bloggers write every day, whether they have anything to say or not.

    "Some of it is not as interesting," says Hicks. "The ones that are updated less frequently, they are the ones that tend to put more thought into it. There are some really smart people out there and they are up on what's happening."

    Hick's site automatically checks the participating Aussie blogs and lists those that have been updated.

    "Within a few hours of the bombing in Bali there were postings on blogs," Hicks says.

    "You can see how people have gone through the phases. At first they expressed shock and then they had a more considered reaction and discussion about what the media said about it."

    Some bloggers, such as Gareth Parker, have an obvious passion for current affairs. Meanwhile ABCWatch, whose author is "Uncle", believes Aunty is "too important to be left to its Friends".

    It doesn't take long to find strong political views. In his blog, Paul Wright defended the Prime Minister from an unflattering profile recently published in the UK's The Independent.

    Journalists are also in on the act - blurring the traditional media lines with their own blogs. The Web diary of SMH writer Margot Kingston, for example, generates some fiery responses from readers.

    For other writers, the direct, editor- and masthead-free approach is appealing. They can write what they think and be as colourful and long-winded as they like, while at the same time raising their profiles.

    However, in bypassing the traditional publishing machinery, blogger-journalists are raising questions. Are they compromising their employer's publication? Are they divulging secrets from the newsroom? Are they saving the best for their own sites?

    Steve Olafson a reporter at the Huston Chonicle, wrote under a pseudonym when making fun of his local politicians in a personal blog, but when his identity was discovered earlier this year he lost his job.

    It's not the worst that could happen, warns lawyer John Corker, a senior associate at Clayton Utz.

    Journalist or not, in a world where email is accepted as evidence in court, a careless posting may have significant ramifications. It may take just minutes to update a blog, but "online content is more permanent than we thought," Corker explains.

    "Publishing on the Net is publishing to the world. More and more we see courts are ready to assert their jurisdiction as far as possible, so there's inevitably an increased risk of legal action being taken for all content on the Web."

    nicole@auscape.net.au

    Most helpful customer reviews

    Most helpful customer reviews

    3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
    I Blog, Therefore I Am, April 30, 2005
    By Avid Blogger (Orlando, FL) - See all my reviews
    This book was an eye opener for me. It brought shocking realization of what is going on in people's minds across the states and the world. It is uncensored with a no holds bar attitude. It is a very quick read, even though it is over 260 pages. It is hard to get bored because the web blog entries are short to mid length. I love how the editors left the blogs untouched, making them more personal and real. I am going to recommend it to all of my friends.

    Comment | Was this review helpful to you? YesNo (Report this)



    3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
    A MUST HAVE!!!, April 30, 2005
    If you ever wanted to know what your children are going through, just pick up this book. This book contains over 300 personal journal entries that really provoke one's mind. This book is a must read. Also if you are not familiar with blogs, this is the perfect stepping stone to this phenomonon.

    Comment | Was this review helpful to you? YesNo (Report this)



    3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
    I Blog, Therefore I Am, April 30, 2005
    Superb book! Easy read! I would recommend it to any teenager or adult.

    Comment | Was this review helpful to you? YesNo (Report this)


    Share your thoughts with other customers: Write an online review

    I blog, therefore I am

    I blog, therefore I am
    Ever read a weblog? Perhaps you are one of the growing numbers who keep one. Or maybe you haven't got a clue what they are. Read on, all will be explained by British blogger Giles Turnbull.

    Last week a little-known awards ceremony in the US gave out precious "Bloggie" gongs to some of the world's best weblogs.

    Weblogs are websites owned and run by ordinary people like you and me. On them, they post stories, poems, pictures, rants, and links to other web sites.

    Nick Robinson's Newslog
    Nick Robinson's online update
    But unlike old-fashioned home pages, they are constantly changing - most weblogs, or "blogs", are updated at least once a day, and in some cases dozens of times a day.

    Some bloggers - especially those who have been at it for a while - have earned notoriety, if not fame, from their weblogs. To their colleagues at the office, they may be the same old face as ever. But online, these people are celebrities.

    Aside from constant updating, the other important thing about weblogs is that anybody can have one. Setting up a blog requires very little internet expertise, and can be done for no money whatsoever.

    Starting a weblog at Blogger.com, the website that started the blogging boom, takes little over two minutes (I set up a new one just to check - see internet links on the right of this page). The simplicity of the process is partly responsible for the huge rise of blogging.

    Westminster watch

    It's become so popular that the idea has spread to mainstream sites. BBC News Online has a weblog where political correspondent Nick Robinson posts regular updates about the world of Westminster. The Guardian runs a much-admired weblog concentrating on international news.

    Bloggies 2002
    Weblog of the year: Wil Wheaton Dot Net
    Lifetime achievement: Evan Williams
    Best weblog about music: u2log.com
    Weblogs are earning a reputation as a useful means of storing information, like a personal library where you can file away interesting snippets that you might like to return to another day.

    They also encourage creativity and expression on the part of their owners.

    Bloggers, of course, like to read other weblogs. They frequently create links from one weblog to the next. They have been known to create and build friendships, even love affairs - and in some cases, they have known to foster bitchiness, resentment, and yes, even anger.

    So when the Bloggie award winners were announced last week, there was considerable excitement in the world of weblogging.

    'Well known'

    Tom Coates, the man behind PlasticBag.org was delighted to win the award for Best European Weblog.

    Bulging diary
    Let the world know what's in your diary
    "I'm lucky enough to have been running a weblog for a long time now, and because of that I'm reasonably well known in the community," he said.

    "For better or worse that seems to count for quite a lot. But having said that, people wouldn't come to the site or vote for it if they really didn't enjoy it - so I must be doing something right."

    The Bloggie awards are "a fun way for people to find sites they might not otherwise know about. They're also a nice way to get a bit of publicity for a new kind of interactive media: direct online personal publishing".

    Meg Pickard, another well-known British blogger, tried to explain the appeal of having a weblog:

    Whil Wheaton screengrab
    Best weblog in the world went to Wil Wheaton Dot Net
    "I know a lot more about the web now than I did a few years ago. Keeping a website which is updated frequently is a great way to learn about new sites, technologies, ideas and memes," she said.

    "I don't want to be a web personality; my site is just my ramblings, as if I was in the pub with a bunch of mates - but organised in sequential, digital form. I maintain my site for my own interest and curiosity. It's a thinking space."

    And Dan Hon, another "old-timer" who remembers when there were only about 20 self-confessed UK bloggers (there are now over 400), says his weblog is "another method of communication. I could use e-mail, but sometimes it's just easier if I post things to my blog".

    So, if you have regular access to the web, you could have a weblog of your own.

    Woody Allen
    Fan of Woody? Let your admiration be more widely known
    If you go to blogger.com and click on the "Start now!" button, you could have one set up in no time at all. (If you do need help, there's an article on BBC Webwise that has more detail.)

    Just imagine - your own, free place on the net to record your thoughts, to place your bookmarks, to rant and scream about all the things that annoy you. A place to pretend you're someone else, or to put all those poems and stories you've been writing over the years.

    A place to write about your efforts to learn Spanish, your love of Woody Allen movies, or your stamp collection.